On December 6th, Glenn Cady proudly announced that the highly anticipated Ultimate Edition 3.0 operating system has been released and it's available for download on mirrors worldwide. After being based on the Ubuntu distribution for so many years, Ultimate Edition has finally switched tables and it is now built from the Linux Mint 11 (Katya) operating system, which itself is based on Ubuntu 11.04 (Natty Narhwal).

Ultimate Edition 3.0 includes software repositories from Getdeb, Linux Mint and Ubuntu, providing a comprehensive software package. It is distributed as a Live DVD ISO image for the 32-bit architecture only! While Ultimate Edition 3.1 is on its way, the current release includes lots and lots of applications, everything one needs and more!

Also on December 6th, Red Hat proudly announced the immediate availability of the final and stable version of the powerful Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.2 operating system. RHEL 6.2 is a maintenance release, bringing new features and lots of enhancements in various areas, keeping the enterprise platform stable.

On December 8th, Liam McLoughlin announced a new open source operating system called Chromium OS Lime, a lightweight, open source and lightning-fast operating system for your notebook, netbook, or even desktop. With out-of-the-box support for HTML5, Flash and Java, containing the familiar environment of Google Chromium/Chrome, the entire web is at your fingertips in a few seconds with Chromium OS Lime.

Chromium OS Lime offers a mix between bleeding edge features of the Chromium OS Vanilla build but with the extra hardware support provided in the Chromium OS Flow build. Chromium OS Lime is the latest build of the Chromium Operating System built by Hexxeh, and it supposed to work out-of-the-box with many modern and old hardware components.

Chromium OS Lime

Download Chromium OS Lime 1408.0 now from Softpedia. Remember that this is an development release and it should NOT be installed on production machines. It is intended to be used for testing purposes only.

On December 9th, Karanbir Singh proudly announced the immediate availability for download of the CentOS 6.1 Linux operating system. The new CentOS 6.1 operating system is based on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.1 distribution, and it brings all the features that are present in the RHEL distro, with which is 100% binary compatible.

Even if it's based on the upstream RHEL 6.1 release, the new CentOS 6.1 also includes packages from all variants. Moreover, the developers combined all upstream repositories into a single one, makeing things easier for all end users. Users of older CentOS releases, like CentOS 4 or CentOS 5, have no way of upgrading directly to the new CentOS 6 release. Therefore, the development team recommends a fresh install.

How to Move Ubuntu Window Buttons To Right Side

· At the request of many of our readers, we've created the following tutorial to teach them how to easily move the window buttons from left to right side in the Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx), Ubuntu 10.10 (Maverick Meerkat), Ubuntu 11.04 (Natty Narwhal) and Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot) operating systems.

Move Ubuntu Window Buttons To Right Side

However, because the switch to the GNOME 3 desktop environment, starting with Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot) the above mentioned methods are obsolete. The only viable method at this time is through a little software called Metacity Window Buttons.

· For this week we've posted an 480p high-definition video clip that showcases the presents that gameplay of the upcoming Trine 2 video game for Linux operating systems. The video has 1 minute and 38 seconds, and it was posted by AtlusUSA. Enjoy!